| Literature DB >> 33604130 |
Christopher Kevin Wong1, Lauren Ziaks2, Samantha Vargas3, Tessia DeMattos3, Chelsea Brown2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: After concussion many people have cervicogenic headache, visual dysfunction, and vestibular deficits that can be attributed to brain injury, cervical injury, or both. While clinical practice guidelines outline treatments to address the symptoms that arise from the multiple involved systems, no preferred treatment sequence for post-concussion syndrome has emerged.Entities:
Keywords: cervicogenic headache; concussion; manual therapy; vestibular rehabilitation; vision therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33604130 PMCID: PMC7872443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Sports Phys Ther ISSN: 2159-2896
Table 1: Characteristics of the Patient Cohort
|
| 25 males, 13 female |
|
| 26.9 ± 19.7 years |
|
| 39.5% |
| 60.5% 18.4% 13.2% 7.9% | |
| 26.3% 10.5% 63.2% |
Table 2: Clinical and Patient-reported Outcomes
| System | Assessments | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Combined | Post-Concussion Symptom Scale | p=0.001, 95%CI 12.4 – 30.6, n=19, d=1.18 |
| Musculoskeletal | Cervical ROM | 55.6% (15/27) regained full ROM |
| Vision Convergence Saccades | Convergence Insufficiency Scale Brain Injury Vision Symptom Survey Near-point Brock string score Saccade score | p=0.002, 95%CI 7.1 – 18.3, n=19, d=1.04 p<0.001, 95%CI=13.4-28.0, n=15, d=1.21 p<0.001, 95%CI 3.3 – 6.3, n=23, d=1.20 p>0.05, n=13 |
| Vestibular BPPV Balance-objective Balance-subjective | Dizziness Handicap Index BPPV symptoms Balance Error Scoring System Activity-specific Balance Confidence | p<0.001, 95%CI 14.5 – 33.2, n=19, d=1.04 100% (28/28) resolved fully p<0.001, 95%CI 5.5 – 11.6, n=14, d=0.99 p=0.024, 95%CI -0.3 - -0.1, n=16, d=-0.89 |
BPPV = Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo ROM = Range of Motion 95%CI = 95% Confidence Interval